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Energy

Submitted by ChemPRIME Staff on Wed, 12/08/2010 - 23:49

EnergyA system's capacity to do work. is usually defined as the capability for doing workA mechanical process in which energy is transferred to or from an object, changing the state of motion of the object.. For example, a billiard ball can collide with a second ball, changing the direction or speed of motion of the latter. In such a process the motion of the first ball would also be altered. We would say that one billiard ball did work on (transferred energy to) the other.

Kinetic Energy

Energy due to motion is called kinetic energy and is represented by Ek. For an object moving in a straight line, the kinetic energy is one-half the productA substance produced by a chemical reaction. of the massA measure of the force required to impart unit acceleration to an object; mass is proportional to chemical amount, which represents the quantity of matter in an object. and the square of the speed:

Ek = ½mu2 (1)

Where

m = mass of the object

u = speed of object

If the two billiard balls mentioned above were studied in outer space, where friction due to their collisions with air molecules or the surface of a pool table would be negligible, careful measurements would reveal that their total kinetic energy would be the same before and after they collided. This is an example of the law of conservation of energy, which states that energy cannot be created or destroyed under the usual conditions of everyday life. Whenever there appears to be a decrease in energy somewhere, there is a corresponding increase somewhere else.

EXAMPLE 1 Calculate the kinetic energy of a Volkswagen Beetle of mass 844 kg (1860 lb) which is moving at 13.4 m s–1 (30 miles per hour).

SolutionA mixture of one or more substances dissolved in a solvent to give a homogeneous mixture.

Ek = ½ mu2 = ½ × 844 kg × (13.4 m s–1) 2 = 7.58 × 104 kg m2 s–2

In other words the units for energy are derived from the SI baseIn Arrhenius theory, a substance that increases the concentration of hydroxide ions in an aqueous solution. In Bronsted-Lowry theory, a hydrogen-ion (proton) acceptor. In Lewis theory, a species that donates a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond. units kilogramThe SI unit for mass. for mass, meterThe SI unit for distance or length. for length, and second for time. A quantity of heatEnergy transferred as a result of a temperature difference; a form of energy stored in the movement of atomic-sized particles. or any other form of energy may be expressed in kilogram meter squared per second squared. In honor of Joule’s pioneering work this derived unit 1 kg m2 s–2 called the joule, abbreviated J. The Volkswagen in question could do nearly 76 000 J of work on anything it happened to run into.

Potential Energy

Potential Energy is energy that is stored by rising in height, or by other means. It frequently comes from separating things that attract, like rising birds are being separated from the Earth that attacts them, or by pulling magnets apart, or pulling an electrostatically charged balloon from an oppositely charged object to which it has clung. Potential Energy is abbreviated EP and gravitational potential energy is calculated as follows:

EP = mgh (2)

Where

m = mass of the object in kg

g = gravitational constant, 9.8 m s2

h = height in m

Notice that EP has the same units, kg m2 s–2 or Joule as kinetic energy.

EXAMPLE 2 How high would the VW weighing weighign 844 kg and moving at 30 mph need to rise (vertically) on a hill to come to a complete stop, if none of the stopping power came from friction?

Solution:
The car's kinetic energy is 7.58 × 104 kg m2 s–2(from EXAMPLE 1), so all of this would have to be converted to EP. Then we could calculate the vertical height:

EP = mgh = 7.58 × 104 kg m2 s–2 = 844 kg x 9.8 ms2 x h

h = 9.2 m

Even when there is a great deal of friction, the law of conservation of energy still applies. If you put a milkshake on a mixer and leave it there for 10 min, you will have a warm, rather unappetizing drink. The whirling mixer blades do work on (transfer energy to) the milkshake, raising its temperatureA physical property that indicates whether one object can transfer thermal energy to another object.. The same effect could be produced by heating the milkshake, a fact which suggests that heating also involves a transfer of energy. The first careful experiments to determine how much work was equivalent to a given quantity of heat were done by the English physicist James Joule (1818 to 1889) in the 1840s. In an experiment very similar to our milkshake example, Joule connected falling weights through a pulley system to a paddle wheel immersed in an insulated container of water. This allowed him to compare the temperature rise which resulted from the work done by the weights with that which resulted from heating.
Units with which to measure energy may be derived from the SI base units of Table 1 from The International System of Units (SI) by using Eq. (1).

Another unit of energy still widely used by chemists is the calorieA unit of energy equal to 4.184 J; abbreviated cal.. The calorie used to be defined as the energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of water from 14.5°C to 15.5°C but now it is defined as exactly 4.184 J.

Diigolet

Term of the Day

A unitA particular measure of a physical quantity that is used to express the magnitude of the physical quantity; for example, the meter is the unit of the physical quantity, length. for expressing the relative masses of atomsThe smallest particle of an element that can be involved in chemical combination with another element; an atom consists of protons and neutrons in a tiny, very dense nucleus, surrounded by electrons, which occupy most of its volume.; abbreviated amuAbbreviation for atomic mass unit, a unit for expressing the relative masses of atoms. An atom of carbon-12 has a mass of 12 amu. 1 amu corresponds to 1.662x10-24 g.. An atom of carbon-12 has a mass of 12 amu. 1 amu corresponds to 1.662x10-24 g.

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